University Press: Cambridge, 1967).
•
Anthony, Mayvis, 2006. "The Legendary Life and Fables of
Aesop", Mayant Press
Caxton's famous Epilogue to the Fables
•
, 1697. Dissertation upon the Epistles of
Phalaris... and the Fables of Æsop. London.
•
Compton, Todd, Victim of the Muses: Poet as Scapegoat, Warrior
and Hero in Greco-Roman and Indo-European Myth and History.
Washington, D.C.: Center for Hellenic Studies/Harvard University Press,
2006, pp. 19-40.
•
Jacobs, Joseph, 1889. The Fables of Aesop: Selected, Told Anew,
and Their History Traced, as first printed by William Caxton, 1484, from
his French translation
o
i. A short history of the Aesopic fable
o
ii. The Fables of Aesop
•
Handford, S. A., 1954. Fables of Aesop. New York: Penguin.
•
Holzberg, N., 2002. The Ancient Fable: An Introduction. Trans.
by C. Jackson-Holzberg. Bloomington, IN.
The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero
The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979, pp.
280-90 in print edition.
•
Perry, Ben E. (editor), 1965. Babrius and Phaedrus, (Loeb
Classical Library) Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1965. English
translations of 143 Greek verse fables by Babrius, 126 Latin verse fables by
Phaedrus, 328 Greek fables not extant in Babrius, and 128 Latin fables not
extant in Phaedrus (including some medieval materials) for a total of 725
fables.